Francis Diane B, Noar Seth M, Kowitt Sarah D, Jarman Kristen L, Goldstein Adam O
Manship School of Mass Communication, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 80803, USA.
School of Media and Journalism, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA; Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Prev Med. 2017 Jun;99:94-98. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.01.021. Epub 2017 Feb 9.
Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable disease and death globally. The 2014 Surgeon General's Report included new diseases linked to smoking, including liver and colon cancer, diabetes and tuberculosis. As more diseases are linked to smoking, which diseases should we communicate to the public and what message source has the most impact?
Data were collected through a nationally representative phone survey of US adults (N=5014), conducted from September 2014 through May 2015. We experimentally randomized participants to a 2 (new smoking disease messages - liver and colon cancers compared to diabetes and tuberculosis) by 4 (message sources - CDC, FDA, Surgeon General, and none) experiment. The outcome was message believability.
About half the sample was female (51.5%) and 17.8% were a current smoker. Overall, 56% of participants said the messages were very believable. Cancer messages (liver and colon cancer) were significantly more believable than messages about chronic disease (tuberculosis and diabetes), 61% vs. 52%. Smokers were less likely to report both sets of new disease messages as very believable compared to non-smokers. Significantly more smokers intending to quit (44.5%) found the messages to be very believable compared to smokers not intending to quit (22.6%). Believability did not differ by message source.
Important differences exist in believability of disease messages about new tobacco-related information. Messages emphasizing the causal link between smoking and new diseases should be considered for use in mass media campaigns.
吸烟是全球可预防疾病和死亡的主要原因。2014年美国卫生局局长的报告纳入了与吸烟相关的新疾病,包括肝癌、结肠癌、糖尿病和结核病。随着越来越多的疾病与吸烟相关联,我们应该向公众传达哪些疾病信息,以及哪种信息来源的影响最大?
数据通过2014年9月至2015年5月对美国成年人进行的具有全国代表性的电话调查收集(N = 5014)。我们通过一项2(新的吸烟疾病信息——肝癌和结肠癌与糖尿病和结核病相比)×4(信息来源——疾病控制与预防中心、食品药品监督管理局、卫生局局长,以及无信息来源)的实验,将参与者随机分组。结果变量是信息可信度。
约一半的样本为女性(51.5%),17.8%为当前吸烟者。总体而言,56%的参与者表示这些信息非常可信。癌症信息(肝癌和结肠癌)比慢性病信息(结核病和糖尿病)的可信度显著更高,分别为61%和52%。与非吸烟者相比,吸烟者报告这两组新疾病信息都非常可信的可能性更低。与不打算戒烟的吸烟者相比,明显更多打算戒烟的吸烟者(44.5%)认为这些信息非常可信。信息可信度在信息来源方面没有差异。
关于新的烟草相关信息的疾病信息可信度存在重要差异。在大众媒体宣传活动中应考虑使用强调吸烟与新疾病之间因果关系的信息。